Tolerant Kidney Transplant Patients Produce B Cells with Regulatory Properties

Mélanie Chesneau(Nantes Université), Laure Michel(Institut de Transplantation Urologie en Nephrologie), Emilie Dugast(Institut de Transplantation Urologie en Nephrologie), Alexis Chenouard(Nantes Université), Daniel Barón(Nantes Université), Annaïck Pallier(Inserm), Justine Durand(Nantes Université), Faouzi Braza(Nantes Université), Pierrick Guérif(Institut de Transplantation Urologie en Nephrologie), David Laplaud(Institut de Transplantation Urologie en Nephrologie), Jean‐Paul Soulillou(Institut de Transplantation Urologie en Nephrologie), Magali Giral(Institut de Transplantation Urologie en Nephrologie), Nicolas Degauque(Nantes Université), Elise Chiffoleau(Nantes Université), Sophie Brouard(Institut de Transplantation Urologie en Nephrologie)
Journal of the American Society of Nephrology
February 3, 2015
Cited by 158Open Access
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Abstract

Whereas a B cell-transcriptional profile has been recorded for operationally tolerant kidney graft patients, the role that B cells have in this tolerance has not been reported. In this study, we analyzed the role of B cells from operationally tolerant patients, healthy volunteers, and kidney transplant recipients with stable graft function on T cell suppression. Proliferation, apoptosis, and type I proinflammatory cytokine production by effector CD4(+)CD25(-) T cells were measured after anti-CD3/anti-CD28 stimulation with or without autologous B cells. We report that B cells inhibit CD4(+)CD25(-) effector T cell response in a dose-dependent manner. This effect required B cells to interact with T-cell targets and was achieved through a granzyme B (GzmB)-dependent pathway. Tolerant recipients harbored a higher number of B cells expressing GzmB and displaying a plasma cell phenotype. Finally, GzmB(+) B-cell number was dependent on IL-21 production, and B cells from tolerant recipients but not from other patients positively regulated both the number of IL-21(+) T cells and IL-21 production, suggesting a feedback loop in tolerant recipients that increases excessive B cell activation and allows regulation to take place. These data provide insights into the characterization of B cell-mediated immunoregulation in clinical tolerance and show a potential regulatory effect of B cells on effector T cells in blood from patients with operationally tolerant kidney grafts.


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